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In our online archive you can find materials from more than 30 years of transmediale. Browse through 12,000 artworks, events, past participants and collaborators, and texts to explore our festival history.
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XXXL explores the erotics, emotions, and political economies of size and scale in technology and defence industries.

The Meltionary is a growing experimental directory that investigates metaphors of melting in times of climate crisis and explores unstable states of matter.

 Research Refusal workshop closely following the festival theme of for refusal, involved research groups and explored issues related to research infrastructures.

The 2022 workshop Rendering Research investigates how the rendering of research typically reinforces certain limitations of thought and action, and more specifically to what extent it is possible to exert control over ways of making things public.

 Research Refusal workshop closely following the festival theme of for refusal, involved research groups and explored issues related to research infrastructures.

For the 10th anniversary of Vorspiel, transmediale and CTM Festival present an extended pre-festival programme in a mix of in-person and online formats.

transmediale seeks enthusiastic and attentive volunteers to facilitate the remote viewing of the festival exhibition.

We are excited to tell you more about the beginning of our year-long festival: transmediale 2021–22 opens with an exhibition and extended film programme. Read more.

In their project HyperBody, Qiang explores cultures within VR, fandom, and ACGN-communities, and experiments with transformative queer practices. Read more.

Apply now for the Vilém Flusser Residency 2021: the call on our submission platform is open until 30 November. 

We are very happy to present two new transmediale residents for our Residency Programme in collaboration with Martin Roth Initiative (MRI): Bassem Saad and Natasha Tontey. Read more.

As part of an ongoing collaboration between transmediale festival, Aarhus University and various other institutions, we are seeking proposals by research groups to collaboratively research refusal and its effects on research practices and infrastructures. Turn in your submission now!

Pages

/artwork

Year: 
1986
Format: 
film/video
Edition: 
1995

/event

Date: 
04.02.2004
Format: 
Panel

/person

/text

Eight years ago, in 2011, a multiplicity of self-managed solidarity organizations, ranging from food provision and health care to education initiatives, emerged from the occupation of Syntagma Square in the heart of Athens, among other places across Greece. Today, after the vanishing of an acutely felt crisis and an extensive anti-austerity struggle, a process of strategic introspection and consolidation within the solidarity initiatives has begun, according to Christos Giovanopoulos. The researcher and activist was part of the talk that framed the screening of Robin Vanbesien’s film Under These Words (Solidarity Athens 2016) at this year’s transmediale. The film and the associated book, Solidarity Poiesis: I Will Come and Steal You, constitute a profound investigation of the transformative experience and political potential of solidarity work. Dipping into various iterations of the festival’s core question—“What moves you?”—, this essay reflects on the making of the film as much as it engages with corresponding thoughts of contemporary authors like Valeria Graziano, Avery F. Gordon and Alberto Toscano.